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Comparative Study
. 2021 Feb 4;101(2):pzaa212.
doi: 10.1093/ptj/pzaa212.

Patterns of Sitting, Standing, and Stepping After Lower Limb Amputation

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Patterns of Sitting, Standing, and Stepping After Lower Limb Amputation

Matthew J Miller et al. Phys Ther. .

Abstract

Objective: The objectives of this study were to describe sitting, standing, and stepping patterns for people with lower limb amputation (LLA) and to compare sitting, standing, and stepping between people with dysvascular LLA and people with traumatic LLA.

Methods: Participants with dysvascular or traumatic LLA were included if their most recent LLA was at least 1 year earlier, they were ambulating independently with a prosthesis, and they were between 45 and 88 years old. Sitting, standing, and stepping were measured using accelerometry. Daily sitting, standing, and stepping times were expressed as percentages of waking time. Time spent in bouts of specified durations of sitting (<30, 30-60, 60-90, and >90 minutes), standing (0-1, 1-5, and >5 minutes), and stepping (0-1, 1-5, and >5 minutes) was also calculated.

Results: Participants (N = 32; mean age = 62.6 [SD = 7.8] years; 84% men; 53% with dysvascular LLA) spent most of the day sitting (median = 77% [quartile 1 {Q1}-quartile 3 {Q3} = 67%-84%]), followed by standing (median = 16% [Q1-Q3 = 12%-27%]) and stepping (median = 6% [Q1-Q3 = 4%-9%]). One-quarter (median = 25% [Q1-Q3 = 16%-38%]) of sitting was accumulated in bouts of >90 minutes, and most standing and stepping was accrued in bouts of <1 minute (standing: median = 42% [Q1-Q3 = 34%-54%]; stepping: median = 98% [Q1-Q3 = 95%-99%]). Between-etiology differences included proportion of time sitting (traumatic: median = 70% [Q1-Q3 = 59%-78%]; dysvascular: median = 79% [Q1-Q3 = 73%-86%]) and standing (traumatic: median = 23% [Q1-Q3 = 16%-32%]; dysvascular: median = 15% [Q1-Q3 = 11%-20%]).

Conclusion: Participants had high daily volumes of long durations of sitting. Further, these individuals accumulated most physical activity in bouts of <1 minute.

Impact: High levels of sedentary behavior and physical inactivity patterns may place people with LLA at greater mortality risk relative to the general population. Interventions to minimize sedentary behaviors and increase physical activity are potential strategies for improving poor outcomes of physical therapy after LLA.

Keywords: Amputation; Chronic Health Conditions; Middle-Age; Older Adult; Physical Activity; Sedentary Behavior.

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Figures

Figure
Figure
Proportion of wake time spent sitting, standing, and stepping (inner ring). Proportion of sitting, standing, and stepping within specified bout durations (outer ring; darker color indicates longer duration). Asterisks indicate significant between-etiology differences (P ≤ .05).

References

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